Thursday, May 21, 2026

A Linux Distribution You May Have Never Heard Of

You may not have ever heard of Azure Linux. It's not exactly a secret, and some of its code has apparently worked its way into other, major Linux distributions that you have heard of.

The reason you've probably never heard of it is that it's not designed to be used by individuals as a desktop operating system. The company that makes it prefers that you use a different desktop OS. That company is Microsoft and that other OS is Windoze.

Microsoft created, and uses, Azure Linux to run Azure, its family of more than 200 cloud-based products and services.

Apparently Microsoft doesn't trust Windoze with the important stuff -- it's just something to be sold to the yokels who don't matter except as revenue sources. For the things they need done well and reliably, they use Linux.

Wordle 1797 Hint

 Hint: When it comes to today's Wordle, I concur.

Not Enough? Get the first letter of today's Wordle after the ad below.

New to Wordle? You can play it at the New York Times, and here are some thoughts on how I go about solving each day's puzzle.

First Letter: A

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Semi-Annual Inclement Motorcycle Environment Time

If you don't live in the Gulf coast area, you may not be familiar with Plecia nearctica, usually called the "love bug."


Lovebugs
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One conspiracy theory has it that the bug was genetically engineered at the University of Florida, right here in Gainesville, as a mosquito countermeasure, but in fact it's been around for some time -- originating in Central America and observed in Louisiana more than a century ago before eventually making its way to Florida.

Anyway, twice a year the love bug emerges from larval form, takes flight, mates (continuously, for days, while flying), and dies. I don't know how many millions or billions there in an overall swarm, but in each individual "flight" there can be hundreds of thousands.

The semi-annual swarms annoy automobile drivers. A moving car's windshield can get completely covered, with dead love bugs and become largely opaque in minutes. They can gum up the cooling fins on radiators, vents and intakes, and their pH levels can be acidic enough to damage paint if not quickly washed off.

They can do all those things to motorcycles, motorcycle helmet visors, etc., too. Last year, I was out and about when I ran into the first signs of the swarm. By the time I got home, I had to completely wipe down and clean my helmet and wash my bike, too.

I know car drivers who avoid driving unless absolutely necessary during the swarms, and that's also my policy for riding a motorcycle.

The current swarm has been ongoing for several days, so I'm hoping today is the last of it (I seem to be seeing fewer bugs in the area, after sweeping thousands of bug corpses off my porch yesterday because I thought it was over then).